"The World of Mimi - Friendship Overland!"
BANSKO - THE NEW MAJOR WINTER RESORT
Located
at the foot of the Pirin Mountains and right below the
Pirin
National Park, which is included in the List of
World
Natural Heritage. Now it is the new major winter resort with
lots of courses for skiing.
Fortified
houses made by stone appeared in Bansko during the early National
Revival period. By the end of the 17th century they had become
two-storey ones, although still adhering to mediaeval building
traditions.
The
typical Pirin stone house has two faces - one is a stone facade
facing the street, the other an open “veranda” leading to the
inner yard. The main courtyard is flanked on three sides by the
building itself and resembles a town square. Small, almost
invisible doors let into the walls link the adjoining houses and
enable a quick escape in cases of attack. The hiding place reached
only from the upper floor via a corridor, is made of stone blocks.
Both
the outside wall and the hiding place have embrasures targeted on
all house and yard entrances.
In
certain respects architecture of Bansko resembles monastery
construction - carefully joined stone masonry, few and small
windows with grid, framed with decorative bricks.
The
general appearance is quite stern and austere, and only the
spacious “veranda” with its carved columns and railings
provides some interplay of light and colour. Here one also sees a
special corner providing the best view of both the urban and
natural landscape, and often of the garden as well. Another
feature is a small fireplace, fragrant with the smell of kindling
burning merrily away and throwing light and shadows on the wall.
The
ground floor houses the animal sheds, kitchen, oven, and pantry
and hiding place. The living room, guest room, bedrooms and dining
room are located on the upper floor. The largest room in houses in
Bansko is the dining room. In-built shelves and cupboards of the
same height, touching upon windows, corner niches, copper
utensils, etc, flank the doors.
The
National Revival period houses of the late 18th and early 19th
century are characterized by a greater number of rooms with carved
ceilings, murals and medallions in soft pastel shades, in-built
cupboards, shelves, settees and iconostases.
The
Sirieshtova House (second half of the 18th century) is a fine
example of early Bansko architecture.
The
Velyanova House (end of the 18th or beginning of the 19th century)
was built in 1835 by Velin Ognyanov (a master builder, wood
carver and painter). He enlarged and reconstructed it, painting
the facade and inside walls and adding carved ceilings, columns
and railings.
The
Bouinova (Todeva) House (1864) has both household premises and
shops on its lower floor. The upper floor rooms are richly carved.
The
Bansko School of icon painting and woodcarving was famous
throughout Bulgaria. The murals and carved iconostasis of the
Holy Trinity Church (1832-1835) were made by Velin Ognyanov,
while Dimiter and Simeon Molerov - the son and grandson of the
founder of the school of painting in Bansko Toma Vis0hanov-Molera,
painted the icons. The latter fashioned the iconostasis, carvings
and icons of the Assumption burial church (built in two stages - during the 17th-18th century and at the start of the 19th century).
Bansko is the
native place of Neophit Rilski - one of Bulgaria's foremost
National Revival figures, Nikola Vaptsarov - a world famous poet
and revolutionary who died in the antifascist struggle, and
Paisii
of Hilendar, the monk whose Slav-Bulgarian History, completed in
1762, marked the beginning of the Bulgarian National Revival.